The history of wine making in the Cape goes
back to the earliest settler days. Jan
van Riebeeck landed in 1652 on what became the Cape of Good Hope with the aim
of providing fresh produce for ships of the Dutch East India Company on their way
to and from the Indies. Ostensibly
because wine was supposed to help scurvy, but perhaps for a quiet tipple on the
side, he planted the first vineyard three years later. And on the 2nd of February 1659,
he was able to proclaim: “Today, praise be to God, wine was pressed from Cape
grapes for the first time.” By all
accounts the wine was pretty foul - not too surprising given the level of
expertise around.
Van Riebeeck was
succeeded twenty years later by Simon van der Stel, an interesting if
contentious character, who did know about wine and saw the opportunity for a
guilder or two to come his way. The Cape peninsular has a climate not too different from that of
southern Europe with winter rainfall and moderate temperatures. The soils were also appropriate, so once the
Cape had some experienced winemakers, it wasn’t too difficult to find good
places to produce wine. One of the best
turned out to be Constantia, which in those days was close to Cape Town - and is
now largely a wealthy suburb of Cape Town but still boasts a few iconic wine estates.
The wines that made Constantia famous came
later when Hendrik Cloete moved from Stellenbosch (named after van der Stel)
and bought a portion of the Constantia estate in 1777. He planted new vines and specialized in a
wine made from grapes ripened almost to raisins on the vine, matured in vats,
and fortified to help it survive the trip to Europe and long life in the cellar. The wine was called
simply Constantia and it held its own
against all the choice sweet wines of Europe with the rich and famous of the day. Jane Austin recommended it in Sense and
Sensibility for “its healing powers on the disappointed heart” and I’m sure
that did no harm to sales. Napoleon developed a taste for it, and polished off a
bottle a day on Elba. There is even a
rumor that it was used to poison him when he refused all other sustenance.
At the end of 1817 the estate was divided
into Groot and Klein Constantia (“Big” and “Little”) and Johan Gerhard Cloete
built himself an imposing manor house on the latter in 1822. The wine continued to sell out in every
vintage. All this came to an end in 1865
when phylloxera devastated the vineyards and winemaking ceased. Still, a few bottles survive to this
day. A wine-writer friend of mine was
fortunate to taste one some years ago and pronounced it still luscious after
200 years.
In 1979 Duggie Jooste bought Klein
Constantia and embarked on an ambitious experiment – to try to recreate the
historic Constantia wine. It was to be a sweet desert wine in the late
harvest style with the berries hand-selected.
The venture was a stunning success and celebrated in the name – Vin de Constance – and in copies of the
old Constantia hand-made bottles which
the estate uses for the modern wine. The
wine rapidly reestablished its pride of place as South Africa’s best respected
dessert wine – at least of the non-botrytis style.
The estate changed hands again in 2011, so
time will tell if the new owners keep the traditions and the quality. Hopefully, the Phoenix will keep on flying. In the meanwhile the wine has rocketed back
to the sort of prices that require you to be rich and famous! $50 for half a liter
is regarded as cheap in South Africa, and you’ll pay in the $80 range overseas. Still, it’s worth trying. And you can imagine you are sharing the
bottle with Bismark or Napoleon or King George...
Michael - Thursday
Oh, Michael, thank you for bringing me back to Constantia. What a gorgeous place. From there we went to Franschhoek* and Stellenbosch for four glorious days. In one place we drank bubbly poured from a bottle that the owner had opened with a sword!
ReplyDelete*Are there other words that have two h's in a row?
You should ask my friend Rich Eichholz!
DeleteYou have made me feel guilty now Michael. I was choosing the wine for my launch last night- I thought the white at a fiver a gallon had a roguish charm. And it dissolves rust on contact.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this, Michael. I always thought the vineyards came with the immigration of the French Huguenots. Didn't know the Dutch had wine making in their repertoire.
ReplyDeleteHmm. The H question is a good one. No doubt Google knows if we can just find the right question.
ReplyDeleteCaro, You have the roguish charm. The wine just dissolves rust!
ReplyDeleteInteresting point, Michael. Certainly the Dutch couldn't make wine in the Netherlands! Franchhoek was settled by (French) settlers in 1688. Although Jacobus Cloete was from that era, there seems nothing linking him to the French settlers.
ReplyDeleteMichael, you're almost inspiring me to resume tippling.
ReplyDeleteSouth African Pinotage. Yummy.
ReplyDeleteGood idea, Lisa! Pinotage has an interesting story also.
DeleteGood idea, Lisa! Pinotage has an interesting story also.
Delete